- EPI 513 (Epidemiologic Methods II): Epidemiology course focused on study design and analysis.
- EPI 510 (Epidemiologic Data Analysis): Epidemiology course focused on learning statistical programming for epidemiological problems.
- PHI 511 (Foundations of Public Health): Introductory course in MPH program covering the basic tenets of public health research, practice, philosophy, and background.
- PHI 512 (Analytic Skills for Public Health I): Introductory course in MPH program that covers concepts of biostatistics and epidemiology and their applications.
- EPI 320: Introductory course in epidemiology for majors.
- HSERV 482 (The Health of Populations): Course that explores what makes a population health or unhealthy and examines why the USA is less healthy than all the other rich countries, despite being one of the healthiest fifty years ago.
- PHG 301 (Intro to Genetic Epidemiology): Explores basic approaches that are used to identify genetic and environmental factors in health and disease, and how application of this information can be used to improve population health. Discusses the relevant ethical, legal, and social implications that occur in research and translation to practice.
- SPH 480 (Public Health Research Methods): Course that applies concepts and research methods to real public health problems.
- SPH 481 (Ethics, Social Justice, and Policy in Public Health): Course that explores and applies ethical theories and social justice frameworks to the implementation of public health efforts and programs.
- HSERV 476 (Introduction to Ethnographic Methods): A course in the Health Services department that has students learn and practice qualitative ethnographic research methods through direct practice. The course is predicated on a quarter-long research project where groups of two or three students choose a local cultural group and study them through observations, interviews, and participation in their activities.
- ENVH 444 (Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria/Genes Impact on the Environment and Public Health): Course that deeply studies the spread and impact of antibiotic resistant bacteria and genes from a One Health perspective.
- ENV H 451 (Ecology of Environmentally Transmitted Microbiological Hazards): Course in the biology, spread, and impact of environmentally transmitted pathogens.
- HONORS 220: Medical ethics course (GPA 4.0) that explored the ethical frameworks and intractable problems that arise in the American health care system, including macro and micro level resource allocation and legislation concerning health provision.
- BIOST 310: Introductory biostatistics course
- SPH 380 (History and Practice of Public Health): Introductory public health course that explores contemporary public health frameworks, the history of public health practice and philosophy, and how to effectively engage in a public health framework.
- SPH 381 (Science and Public Health): Core public heath course that explores the various scientific disciplines of public health as well as providing necessary background knowledge in biology, chemistry, and statistics.
- GEOG 245: Geodemographics course that taught about statistical analysis of population data based on geographic distribution. Also taught skills on the use of GIS tools.
- EPI 201: Survey epidemiology course focusing infectious zoonotic disease outbreaks.
- BIOL 240: 15-credit intensive biology course with emphasis on human health.
- three quarter calculus series, three quarter chemistry series, two quarter computer science (JAVA programming) series, two quarter physics series, one course in informatics, one course in game theory